Contents (speakers only): Peter Albin -- Ken Babbs -- Dr. Randy Baker -- Sonny Barger -- John Perry Barlow -- Bob Barsotti -- Peter Barsotti -- Jerilyn Lee Brandelius -- Steve Brown -- Yen-Wei Choong - Tom Constanten -- Tom Davis -- John "Marmaduke" Dawson -- Len Dell'amico -- Gloria Dibiase -- Vince Dibiase -- Rev. Matthew Fox -- Devid Freiberg -- Carolyn "Mountain Girl" Garcia -- Clifford "Tiff" Garcia -- Manasha Matheson Garcia -- Sara Ruppenthal Garcia -- Bill Graham -- David Graham -- Laird Grant -- David Grisman -- Gary Gutierrez -- Mickey Hart -- Dexter Johnson -- Hal Kant -- Jorma Kaukonen -- Ken Kesey -- Sat Santokh Singh Khalsa -- Justin Kreutzmann -- Stacy Kreutzmann -- Cassidy Law -- Eileen Law -- Celeste Lear -- Marshall Leicester -- Richard Loren
Contents (speakers only) (cont.): Jon McIntire -- Donna Godchaux McKay -- Barbara Meier -- Chesley Millikin -- David Nelson -- Harry Popick -- Ron Rakow -- Sandy Rothman -- Peter Rowan -- Merl Saunders -- Nicki Scully -- Rock Scully -- Sage Scully -- Grace Slick -- Joe Smith -- Owsley Stanley -- Sue Stephens -- Sue Swanson -- Bill Thompson -- Pete Townshend -- Alan Trist -- Michael Walker -- Wavy Gravy -- Bob Weir -- Joshua White -- Suzy Wood -- Elanna Wyn-Ellis
For more than thirty years, Jerome John Garcia played guitar and sang in the traveling menagerie and living social experiment called the Grateful Dead. What started as a jug band in Palo Alto evolved into a rock and roll institution, playing to audiences composed of both gray-bearded boomers and tie-dyed baby Deadheads. At the center of this phenomenon was Jerry, whose musical gifts and affable manner made him the symbol of all things magical. In Dark Star, we see Garcia
through the eyes of those closest to him, who speak for the first time since his death: the ex-wives and lovers who did their best to make him happy but in the end always seemed to lose him to the road; the close friends who watched in helpless frustration as he battled a long-running heroin habit he tried again and again to kick; the children of fellow members of the Grateful Dead for whom he was the father he could never be to his own daughters; the musicians who looked up to him as a guru and an older brother